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FIT5151
Object-oriented business application development
Unit Guide
Semester 2, 2012
The information contained in this unit guide is correct at time of publication. The University has the right
to change any of the elements contained in this document at any time.
Last updated: 21 Jun 2012
Table of Contents
FIT5151 Object-oriented business application development - Semester 2, 2012...............................1
Mode of Delivery..............................................................................................................................1
Contact Hours..................................................................................................................................1
Workload..........................................................................................................................................1
Unit Relationships............................................................................................................................1
Prerequisites........................................................................................................................1
Chief Examiner............................................................................................................................................1
Campus Lecturer.........................................................................................................................................1
Caulfield...........................................................................................................................................2
Academic Overview...................................................................................................................................3
Outcomes........................................................................................................................................3
Graduate Attributes..........................................................................................................................3
Assessment Summary.....................................................................................................................4
Teaching Approach..........................................................................................................................4
Feedback.........................................................................................................................................4
Our feedback to You............................................................................................................4
Your feedback to Us............................................................................................................4
Previous Student Evaluations of this unit....................................................................................................4
Required Resources....................................................................................................................................5
Prescribed text(s)........................................................................................................................................5
Recommended Resources..........................................................................................................................5
Recommended text(s).................................................................................................................................5
Unit Schedule.............................................................................................................................................6
Assessment Requirements......................................................................................................................7
Assessment Policy...........................................................................................................................7
Assessment Tasks...........................................................................................................................7
Participation.........................................................................................................................7
Examinations...............................................................................................................................................8
Examination 1..................................................................................................................................8
Assignment submission...............................................................................................................................8
Online submission.......................................................................................................................................8
Extensions and penalties.............................................................................................................................8
Returning assignments................................................................................................................................8
Other Information......................................................................................................................................9
Policies............................................................................................................................................9
Student services..............................................................................................................................9
Reading list....................................................................................................................................10
FIT5151 Object-oriented business application development -
Semester 2, 2012
FIT5151 will aim at capitalising on what students have learned in FIT9017 Foundations of programming
(or equivalent. The unit covers more in-depth material to enable students to build business applications
that follow good Software Engineering principles of maintainability, reusability and expandability. The
emphasis will be on helping students acquire solid object-oriented programming knowledge and skills for
building business applications. Popular object-oriented design patterns will be introduced whenever
appropriate to illustrate effective design process in building larger systems.
Mode of Delivery
Caulfield (Evening)
Contact Hours
2 hrs lectures/wk, 2 hrs laboratories/wk
Workload
Students will be expected to spend a total of 12 hours per week during semester on this unit as follows:
For on-campus students:
Lectures: 2 hours per week
Tutorial/Lab Sessions: 2 hours per week per tutorial
and up to an additional 8 hours in some weeks for completing lab and project work, private study and
revision.
Off-campus students generally do not attend lecture and tutorial sessions, however, you should plan to
spend equivalent time working through the relevant resources and participating in discussion groups
each week.
Unit Relationships
Prerequisites
FIT9017 or equivalent
Chief Examiner
Dr Chris Ling
Campus Lecturer
1
Caulfield
Chris Ling
FIT5151 Object-oriented business application development - Semester 2, 2012
2
Academic Overview
Outcomes
At the completion of this unit, students will have -
A knowledge and understanding of:
how to produce well-run, well-tested and well-documented object-oriented software by following
solid software engineering principles of maintainability, reusability and expandability;
•   
effective use of popular object-oriented design patterns in the design process of larger systems;•   
how to effectively and efficiently develop object-oriented application solutions to business-related
problem specifications.
•   
Developed attitudes that enable them to:
appreciate the responsibility of coming up with well-tested and documented programs;•   
appreciate the need to maintain ethical conducts when programming by making sure the code
used my program is their own or taken from a legitimate source with full acknowledgement.
•   
Gained practical skills to:
navigate around in an Integrated Development Environment in order to efficiently produce quality
applications;
•   
develop good software testing strategies.•   
Demonstrated the communication skills necessary to:
work in a team to come up with an integrated business software solution•   
explain their design and testing strategies in writing and in person through interviews.
Graduate Attributes
Monash prepares its graduates to be:
responsible and effective global citizens who:1. 
engage in an internationalised worlda. 
exhibit cross-cultural competenceb. 
demonstrate ethical valuesc. 
critical and creative scholars who:
produce innovative solutions to problemsa. 
apply research skills to a range of challengesb. 
communicate perceptively and effectivelyc. 
3
Assessment Summary
Examination (3 hours): 60%; In-semester assessment: 40%
Assessment Task Value Due Date
Assignment 1 20% Week 7, 11.59pm Sunday 9 September 2012
Assignment 2 20% Week 12, 11.59pm Sunday 21 October 2012
Examination 1 60% To be advised
Teaching Approach
Lecture and tutorials or problem classes
Lectures are used to present new concepts and to present example code that uses these concepts.
Practicals are used to give you hands-on experience at programming using the newly taught concepts.
Feedback
Our feedback to You
Types of feedback you can expect to receive in this unit are:
Informal feedback on progress in labs/tutes•   
Graded assignments with comments•   
Interviews•   
Other: Staff responses to queries posted on discussion forums•   
Your feedback to Us
Monash is committed to excellence in education and regularly seeks feedback from students, employers
and staff. One of the key formal ways students have to provide feedback is through SETU, Student
Evaluation of Teacher and Unit. The University's student evaluation policy requires that every unit is
evaluated each year. Students are strongly encouraged to complete the surveys. The feedback is
anonymous and provides the Faculty with evidence of aspects that students are satisfied and areas for
improvement.
For more information on Monash's educational strategy, and on student evaluations, see:
http://www.monash.edu.au/about/monash-directions/directions.html
http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/quality/student-evaluation-policy.html
Previous Student Evaluations of this unit
Based on previous student evaluations, we decided:
To provide more examples in the lecture to help with the understanding of concepts.1. 
To improve the sequencing of certain topics.  2. 
To focus on programming skills rather than the implementation of prototype features in all
practical assignments.
3. 
Academic Overview
4
To align the assessment requirements with students' undertanding of concepts rather than
prototype features. The alignment will be done based on weekly learning objectives.
4. 
If you wish to view how previous students rated this unit, please go to
https://emuapps.monash.edu.au/unitevaluations/index.jsp
Required Resources
Please check with your lecturer before purchasing any Required Resources. Limited copies of prescribed
texts are available for you to borrow in the library, and prescribed software is available in student labs.
Prescribed Software
You must have the Java SE 6 (or later) Software Development Kit (called the JDK) installed on your
computer. This software can be downloaded for free from the internet by going to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html and clicking on the 'download'
button in the JDK column.
Prescribed text(s)
Limited copies of prescribed texts are available for you to borrow in the library.
Barnes and Kolling. (2011). Objects First with Java:A Practical Introduction Using BlueJ. (5th) Prentice
Hall (ISBN: 9780132835541).
Recommended Resources
Useful Software
Whilst the JDK provides the compiler and runtime interpreter for the Java language, you will most likely
want to make use of an Integrated Development Environment (IDE). You may use any IDE that you are
comfortable with. Examples of IDE are BlueJ, Eclipse, JCreator and NetBeans. 
Recommended text(s)
Stuart Reges and Marty Stepp. (2011). Building Java Programs: A Back to Basics Approach. (2nd)
Addison Wesley (ISBN: 0-136-09181-4).
Academic Overview
5
Unit Schedule
Week Activities Assessment
0 No formal assessment or activities are
undertaken in week 0
1 Programming Concepts and Java - variables,
operators, expressions, control structures, recursion,
class structure, collections, primitive types, object
types, exceptions, I/O, file I/O
Tutorial labs commence in Week 1 of
semester. This week's exercise is a
revision of prerequisite knowledge.
2 Object oriented Concepts - classes, objects, methods,
attributes, message passing, constructors, inheritance,
polymorphism, encapsulation, visibility, abstraction,
packages, interacting classes, association,
aggregation, composition
3 Inheritance - subclasses, subtyping, substitution,
overriding, types of inheritance, access modifiers
4 Inheritance - abstract classes, multiple inheritance,
interfaces, inner classes, enumerations
5 Testing, testing tools (JUnit)
6 GUI - event handling, components, layout, AWT and
Swing libraries
7 Persistence: Java database connectivity, more file I/O Assignment 1 due 11.59pm Sunday 9
September 2012
8 Program Design - design techniques (responsibility
driven design), Parnas' principles, design
representation (UML)
9 Program design - coupling and cohesion, Law of
Demeter, Design by Contract, Assertions, Refactoring
10 Design Patterns - decorator, singleton, factory,
observer, etc., frameworks
11 Software development methodologies, agile methods
12 Bringing it all together--Revision Assignment 2 due 11.59pm Sunday 21
October 2012
SWOT VAC No formal assessment is undertaken in
SWOT VAC
Examination period LINK to Assessment Policy:
http://policy.monash.edu.au/policy-bank/
academic/education/assessment/
assessment-in-coursework-policy.html
*Unit Schedule details will be maintained and communicated to you via your MUSO (Blackboard or
Moodle) learning system.
6
Assessment Requirements
Assessment Policy
Faculty Policy - Unit Assessment Hurdles
(http://www.infotech.monash.edu.au/resources/staff/edgov/policies/assessment-examinations/unit-assessment-hurdles.html)
Academic Integrity - Please see the Demystifying Citing and Referencing tutorial at
http://lib.monash.edu/tutorials/citing/
Assessment Tasks
Participation
Assessment task 1
Title:
Assignment 1
Description:
The design and implementation of an application employing the principles introduced in
the early to mid part of the semester.
Details will be made available in the assignment specification.
Weighting:
20%
Criteria for assessment:
This is an individual assignment and must be entirely your own work.
Submissions will be judged on their compliance with the stated functional requirements,
code and design principles presented in the unit.
Assessment of this assignment may be subject to an interview should the marker feels
necessary.
Due date:
Week 7, 11.59pm Sunday 9 September 2012
•   
Assessment task 2
Title:
Assignment 2
Description:
The design and implementation of an application employing the principles introduced in
the mid to later part of the semester.
Details will be made available in the assignment specification.
Weighting:
20%
Criteria for assessment:
This is an individual assignment and must be entirely your own work.
Submissions will be judged on their compliance with the stated functional requirements,
code and design principles presented in the unit.
•   
7
Assessment of this assignment may be subject to an interview should the marker feels
necessary.
Due date:
Week 12, 11.59pm Sunday 21 October 2012
Examinations
Examination 1
Weighting:
60%
Length:
3 hours
Type (open/closed book):
Closed book
Electronic devices allowed in the exam:
None
•   
Assignment submission
It is a University requirement
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/conduct/plagiarism-procedures.html) for
students to submit an assignment coversheet for each assessment item. Faculty Assignment
coversheets can be found at http://www.infotech.monash.edu.au/resources/student/forms/. Please check
with your Lecturer on the submission method for your assignment coversheet (e.g. attach a file to the
online assignment submission, hand-in a hard copy, or use an online quiz).
Online submission
If Electronic Submission has been approved for your unit, please submit your work via the VLE site for
this unit, which you can access via links in the my.monash portal.
Extensions and penalties
Submission must be made by the due date otherwise penalties will be enforced.
You must negotiate any extensions formally with your campus unit leader via the in-semester special
consideration process:
http://www.infotech.monash.edu.au/resources/student/equity/special-consideration.html.
Returning assignments
Students can expect assignments to be returned within two weeks of the submission date or after
receipt, whichever is later.
Assessment Requirements
8
Other Information
Policies
Monash has educational policies, procedures and guidelines, which are designed to ensure that staff and
students are aware of the University's academic standards, and to provide advice on how they might
uphold them. You can find Monash's Education Policies at:
http://policy.monash.edu.au/policy-bank/academic/education/index.html
Key educational policies include:
Plagiarism
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/conduct/plagiarism-policy.html)
•   
Assessment
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/assessment/assessment-in-coursework-policy.html)
•   
Special Consideration
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/assessment/special-consideration-policy.html)
•   
Grading Scale
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/assessment/grading-scale-policy.html)
•   
Discipline: Student Policy
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/conduct/student-discipline-policy.html)
•   
Academic Calendar and Semesters (http://www.monash.edu.au/students/key-dates/);•   
Orientation and Transition (http://www.infotech.monash.edu.au/resources/student/orientation/);
and
•   
Academic and Administrative Complaints and Grievances Policy
(http://www.policy.monash.edu/policy-bank/academic/education/management/complaints-grievance-policy.html)
•   
Codes of Practice for Teaching and Learning
(http://www.policy.monash.edu.au/policy-bank/academic/education/conduct/suppdocs/code-of-practice-teaching-and-learning.html)
•   
Student services
The University provides many different kinds of support services for you. Contact your tutor if you need
advice and see the range of services available at www.monash.edu.au/students. For Sunway see
http://www.monash.edu.my/Student-services, and for South Africa see http://www.monash.ac.za/current/
The Monash University Library provides a range of services and resources that enable you to save time
and be more effective in your learning and research. Go to http://www.lib.monash.edu.au or the library
tab in my.monash portal for more information. At Sunway, visit the Library and Learning Commons at
http://www.lib.monash.edu.my/. At South Africa visit http://www.lib.monash.ac.za/.
Academic support services may be available for students who have a disability or medical condition.
Registration with the Disability Liaison Unit is required. Further information is available as follows:
Website: http://monash.edu/equity-diversity/disability/index.html;•   
Email: dlu@monash.edu•   
Drop In: Equity and Diversity Centre, Level 1 Gallery Building (Building 55), Monash University,
Clayton Campus, or Student Community Services Department, Level 2, Building 2, Monash
University, Sunway Campus
•   
Telephone: 03 9905 5704, or contact the Student Advisor, Student Commuity Services at 03
55146018 at Sunway
•   
9
Reading list
The following may provide useful extra reading for this unit. Copies of these are available in the Library
(on reserve, one day loan or in the normal circulation).
Java Foundations, Lewis, De Pasquale & Chase, (Pearson Education), 2008
Big Java (4th edition), Cay Horstman (John Wiley & Sons), 2010 
Java Programming - from Problem Analysis to Program Design (3rd edition), D. S Malik (Thomson),
2008
Thinking in Java (4th edition), Eckell (Prentice Hall), 2006
Absolute Java (3rd edition), Savitch (Addison Wesley), 2008
Other Information
10